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Top Forums Programming How to find if a process a daemon ? Post 302218737 by Perderabo on Saturday 26th of July 2008 08:15:11 AM
Old 07-26-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by matrixmadhan
Any process guarded from SIGHUP signal as nohup process and detached from controlling terminal will have a ppid of 1
Not true. Any time any daemon which happens to be ignoring sighup forks, it creates a counterexample to this statement. (init could fork without creating a counterexample, but it never ignores hup)
Quote:
Originally Posted by matrixmadhan
but they are not daemonized.
Actually any process that happens to meet these criteria are daemons. No controlling terminal means the process is a daemon. Whether or not a process is a daemon has nothing to do with the ppid or what signals it is ignoring.

With most versions of unix when you log in on the system console, the ppid of your login shell will be 1. Before the rise of tcp/ip the ppid of every login shell was 1. None of these login shells are daemons, they all have controlling terminals. You still may have other getty lines in /etc/inittab. Each such line is a potential interactive shell with a ppid of 1. But most other children spawned by init do not open ttys and remain daemons.

When a process exits, its children become owned by init. This does not impact whether of not those children are daemons. Some are. Some aren't.

cron will not have a pid of 1. Every time cron spawns a process, that new process is a daemon. Each of these daemons will not have a ppid of 1... their ppid will be pointing to cron.

When you need to determine if a process is a daemon or not, the ppid is completely irrelevant. Daemons and non-daemons can have a ppid of 1. Daemons and non-daemons can have a ppid other than one.

Daemons sometimes choose to not ignore sighup. Both inetd and init itself are examples of daemons that are listening for a HUP. When they get one, they reconfigure themselves. But it is more common for a daemon to be ignoring HUP.

It really it very simple.
Daemons have no controlling terminal.
Non-daemons have a controlling terminal.

Examples of stuff that have no bearing on a process' daemon status...
pid
ppid
signal mask
 

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vxiod(7)						 Miscellaneous Information Manual						  vxiod(7)

NAME
vxiod - Veritas Volume Manager I/O daemon process control device DESCRIPTION
The vxiod device in Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM) is used to control the number of volume I/O daemons active on the system. A process con- text is necessary to implement the plex consistency recovery and writeback error handling policies for multi-plex volumes, and for continu- ing normal I/O after a log write if the volume has logging enabled. It is also required for the plex recovery performed with a mirrored volume in the read/writeback mode. There are three aspects of I/O daemon operations: o General I/O o Error handling o Log handling I/O handling is achieved by an ioctl command that does not return, but instead calls the vxiod routine to wait for errors or I/O requests and process them. When an error occurs, if there are no I/O daemons active, the I/O simply turns into a failure on that plex. If a gen- eral I/O request is queued up when no daemons exist, then the I/O will hang forever until a daemon process is created. If I/O daemons are active, then the I/O is put on a work queue and the daemons are awakened. A daemon takes an error request and tries to read other plexes until a read succeeds or all plexes have been tried. Then, if the writeback facility is enabled, the daemon tries to write the good data to each plex that failed on the read. If the write is successful, the read error is nullified. An I/O request is handled in a similar manner. Logging is handled in a similar manner. An ioctl command, which does not return, is issued to create a daemon for each volume which has logging enabled. This daemon monitors two queues: one queue of I/O which was started while the log was busy (the ``log'' queue), and another queue of requests which have been logged and now need to be started (the ``ready'' queue). I/O requests are taken from the log queue when the log is no longer busy, and another log write is started. Completion of a log write results in all I/O requests which have just been logged being placed on the I/O daemon's ready queue where they are immediately started. One mechanism finds out how many I/O error daemons are running, and another mechanism allows a process to become an I/O daemon. Before a process becomes an I/O daemon, it should close all open files and detach from the controlling tty. An I/O or logging daemon cannot be killed except through an explicit ioctl. FILES
/dev/vx/iod vxiod control device SEE ALSO
vxiod(1M), ioctl(2) VxVM 5.0.31.1 24 Mar 2008 vxiod(7)
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